2. Alexander II Flashcards

1
Q

Alex II

Tutored by…

A

Mikail Spernsky (reformer)
Vasily Zhukovsky (romantic poet)
= leading him to be far more liberal than father

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2
Q

Characteristics which showed him as ‘weak’

A
  • Admitted to one of tutors in 1829 that he wished he hadn’t been born into it.
  • “not strong character’
  • More emphathetic and liberal.
  • Travelled Russia and witnesssed backwardsness - 1837 visited 300 provances.
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3
Q

Emancipation of the Serfs

The Russian peasant

A
  • 85% pop, 50% serfs.
  • Rapid pop growth not matched with rapid productivity.
  • “head of our domestic problems which we must tackle stands…the question of serfdom.” - Samarin, prominent Slavophile.
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4
Q

Emancipation of the Serfs

State peasants

A

Degrees of freedom, 1937 - able to own land

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5
Q

Emancipation of the Serfs

Serf’s life

A
  • Lived dominated by Mir.
  • Only action not avalible to owners = murder.
    1. Obrok - paid rent and very mistreated.
    2. Barishina paid in labour
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6
Q

Emancipation of the Serfs

Emancipation edict 1861

A
  • Right of bondage forever abolished.
  • Only applied to privately owned - state serfs freed 1866.
  • Freed serfs to pay repemption payments, felt cheated.
  • Landowners recieved compensation - nobility felt cheated as they lost land.
  • 15% remained temporarily obligated until 1881.
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7
Q

Emancipation of the Serfs

Concequences for Tsar

A
  • People critical of his actions, calls for a contitution.
  • 647 peasant riots 1st 4 months of ‘61.
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8
Q

Emancipation of the serfs

Other concequences

A
  • Nobility demanded political power in return for loss of serfs.
  • 1861 - 1/4 farmers not self-efficient, 1900 - 1/2.
  • 51 mil freed.
  • Great origin for rev/opp groups.
  • Landowners 115K to 107k.
  • Land owned 200mil - 144mil acres.
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9
Q

Military reforms 1869-81

Reforms

A
  • Conscription compolsory and reduced 25 to 15 years (plus 10 reserve).
  • Abolished military colonies.
  • Bettermed care.
  • Military colleges = better training, punishments less servere.
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10
Q

Military reforms 1869-81

Effects

A
  • Army = smaller and better trained.
  • More money saved by gov.
  • Quality of training improved.
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11
Q

Military reforms 1869-81

Limitations

A
  • Opposed by nobility.
  • Many didn’t want complusory service.
  • Still relied on peasants = training ineffective.
  • slow process of introducing new weapons.
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12
Q

Military reforms 1869-81

Motives

A
  • Crimean war loss.
  • Took up 1/3 gov expenditure + 45% spending.
  • Poorly trained and unsucsessful.
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13
Q

Local gov reforms 1964

Motives

A
  • Governers had no defined role.
  • Lack of co-ordination (only 100,000 docs issued anually)
  • Few personal staff to admin whole country.
  • 50 occasions of peasant unrest each year.
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14
Q

Local gov reforms 1964

Reforms

A
  • Zemstva established.
  • to be elected by nobels
  • town dwellers and peasant councils had general responsiblities for health, education, and infastructure.
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15
Q

Local gov reforms 1964

Effects

A
  • Zemstva brought improvements to roads, healthcare, schools + developed transport.
  • Nobels and councils gained political experience and many wanted to see if could be taken to national level.
  • Members of professional third level began to make demands for social reform and living conditions.
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16
Q

Local gov reforms 1964

Limitations

A
  • Zemstva introduced limited provances + slow to get going.
  • Dominated by nobility who didn’t take responsibility seriously.
  • Results were patchy.
  • Local marshalls and gov vetod some decisions .
  • Peasants didn’t really appreciate.
17
Q

Financial and econ reforms

Reforms

A
  • State bank founded 1866.
  • Savings bank 1869.
  • Systematic overhaul of national finances achieved 1862.
  • Industrial growth significant.
  • serfs freed = more incentive to work, promoted industry.
  • 1860-1890 = annual coal production growth 1200%.
  • Gov rev grew drastically .
  • Tax collecting no longer carried out by private farmers but became regular national buracracy issue. No income tax but tax on products.
18
Q

Education reforms

Motives

A

Alex II recorgnised modern state required more educated population after serfdom abolished.

19
Q

Education reforms

Education decree

A

1863
provided establishments for 2 free primary schools and Zemstva ran schools.

20
Q

Education reforms

Effects

A
  • Increase in primary and secondary, alllowed peasants tp have new, higher aspirations.
  • more acsess to higher education.
  • secondary schools for woman.
  • primary for all.
  • mutual aid groups formed and communal kitchens and libaries.
21
Q

Education reforms

limitations

A
  • not all children achieved full education.
  • only 30% literate after the reform.
  • only 2% of pop attended uni
  • intelligensia critisiced - made them view education as dangerous.
22
Q

Judicial reforms 1864

Motives

A
  • system took years
  • most judges had no training and illiterate.
  • courts relied on bribary, word of noble over peasant + man over woman.
  • onlt relied on written evidence which wasn’t challeneged.
  • police had great power.
23
Q

Judicial reforms 1864

reforms

A
  • simplified with fewer courts.
  • judges paid good salaries - more independant.
  • courts open to public.
  • jury trials introduced for more serious criminal cases.
  • more modern.
24
Q

Judicial reforms 1864

effects

A
  • fairer trials
  • less corruption
  • worked quicker
  • costs nothing to appear in them.
  • created a legal challenge, political authority - freedom of lawyers + juries independant.
25
Q

Judicial reforms 1864

Limitations

A
  • separate coruts for peasants - largely outside mainstream system.
  • church coruts remained outside system + military courts.
  • buracracy still intervened.
  • mainly impacte large cities.
26
Q

Censorship 1870

motive

A

to give people more freedom + allow people to form own opinions + be informed.

27
Q

Censorship 1870

reforms

A
  • newspapers and periodical no longer had to submit to prior censorship.
  • could now discuss gov policy + jury trials.
28
Q

Censorship 1870

effects

A
  • created more relaxed atmosphere - led to huge growth in published books.
  • more public opinion.
  • some editors reported allowed social issues - enabled informed public.
29
Q

Censorship 1870

limitations

A
  • some became overly radical and were shit down
  • bans implimented on certain topics
30
Q
A
31
Q
A